To read the texts click on the texts: Ez 47:1-2,8-9; Jn 2:13-22
The Basilica of St. John Lateran is the cathedral of the
Church of Rome and the official ecclesiastical seat of the Pope who is Bishop
of Rome. It is the oldest and ranks first among the four major basilicas of
Rome. As the cathedral of the Bishop of Rome, it contains the papal throne and
ranks above all churches in the Roman Catholic Church, even above St. Peter’s
Basilica in the Vatican.
It was built by Lateranus Palutius, whom Nero put to
death to seize his goods. It was given in the year 313 by Constantine the Great
to Saint Miltiades, Pope, and was inhabited by his successors until 1308, when
they moved to Avignon. The Lateran Basilica built by Constantine near the
palace of the same name, is the first Basilica of the West. Twelve councils,
four of which were ecumenical, have assembled there, the first in 649, the last
in 1512.
When the Lateran Church was partially ruined by
fires, enemy invasions, and earthquakes, it was always rebuilt with great zeal
by the Sovereign Pontiffs. In 1726, after one such restoration, Pope Benedict
XIII consecrated it anew and assigned the commemoration of that event to the
present day. The church was afterwards enlarged and beautified by Popes Pius IX
and Leo XIII.
The texts chosen today speak of both the external
temple and the temple that is Jesus’ body. Ezekiel is given a vision of a
temple from which water flows. In the Gospel text of today, Jesus cleanses the
external temple which had become a place of degradation and a market place and
replaces it with the Temple that is his body. In other words, true worship now
is no longer merely external and in an external place but has to be in spirit
and truth.
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